New York Post

Grimaldi’s ‘sliced staff outta $20K’

Pie parlor ‘stole wages’

- By STEVEN VAGO

That’s a lot of dough. The owner and manager of Grimaldi’s pizzeria in Manhattan allegedly pocketed $20,000 in wages owed to seven workers — then brazenly bragged about getting away with it when confronted by one of the employees, prosecutor­s said Thursday.

Frank Santora, 71, the proprietor of the famous pizza shop’s Flatiron location, and manager Anthony Piscina, 63, allegedly carried out the racket between August 2017 and August 2023, stiffing pizza makers, busboys and salad preppers, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said at a press conference.

The pie-making pair allegedly underpaid workers, lied about payments, sent bounced paychecks, convinced employees to work through partial payments via apps, set “appointmen­ts” to pay and never showed up and failed “to pay wages altogether,” according to Bragg.

‘I need my money please’

Prosecutor­s said employees sent several text messages to the bosses asking for payment.

One of the distraught workers pleaded for their pay after a death in their family.

“Good morning, what happened to the payment? Please I have an emergency, my grandmothe­r died. I need my money please,” the employee begged Piscina.

When one worker threatened Piscina and Santora with legal action, the brick oven bosses allegedly replied: “I’ve got three complaints on me. The state is not gonna do a thing.”

Another worker was told he was hired for $10 an hour — less than the state minimum wage. He was then scammed out of $8,000 in wages, Bragg said.

The scheme came to light after workers made several complaints against the pizzeria to Bragg’s office.

Piscina and Santora were charged in Manhattan Supreme Court and indicted on scheme to defraud and failure to pay wages in accordance with the labor law. They pleaded not guilty.

Piscina and Santora’s lawyer, Gerard Marrone, said that the charges against his clients “took them by surprise.”

“The indictment alleges schemes of defraud and not paying wages, but goes back from August of 2017 and my clients only owned Grimaldi’s from 2019 . . . I think there are some discrepanc­ies here,” said Marrone.

“If they in fact owe employees money, they’ll pay them back. It’s not a big deal. I mean, these owners are good guys. They take care of their employees,” the attorney said.

 ?? ?? REAL PIZZA WORK: Grimaldi’s owner Frank Santora is arraigned in Manhattan Supreme Court Thursday for allegedly ripping off staff.
REAL PIZZA WORK: Grimaldi’s owner Frank Santora is arraigned in Manhattan Supreme Court Thursday for allegedly ripping off staff.

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